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Comment My biggest suggestion? (Score 1) 523

Take the money you would have spent going to DrupalCon, walk down to your local Junior College, Community College or VoTec and sign up for Econ 101 and if you can find it, Introduction to Engineering. Tech skills are good and all, but the ability to step back and understand why your project is important to the business and how it fits in to the rest of the company and the projects around it are what separates the really good developers from the code-grunts.

I'm not saying you need a 4 year degree, or even an associates, but having that backing will help you in ways you can't even imagine right now.

Comment Re:Oblig XKCD (Score 3, Interesting) 961

Insurance don't make a killing selling insurance polices that they know they're likely to pay out on. A more accurate measure would be whether costal flood insurance costs have been rising faster than other insurance premiums (Earthquake insurance might be a good reference point).

That at least would be proof that Insurance companies are including AGW models into their actuarial tables.

Comment Re:They own the network. (Score 1) 190

Sprint allows this and their coverage and plans have been getting better and better for the last four years.

Right now sprint is doing everything they can to be the "Consumer Friendly" option, with unlimited text and data forthwith same price as Verizon and AT&T's more limited options.

Not a Sprint shill or anything. Just a satisfied customer.

Comment Re:Chrome OS will fail. (Score 1) 103

src:kit requires Chrome, and installs a custom chrome extension when you install it from the web store. I'm not saying it couldn't be done without pure html/javascript, but the actual implementation does include an "install". This is probably to get around javascript sandbox issues with accessing dropbox.

Comment Re:Good Luck (Score 2) 388

What it might do is cut off recruitment. There's a spectrum of Anonymous folks, from the script kiddies who downloaded LOIC, and have it running on their parent's computer, all the way up to the serious folks who actually designed and architected the attacks. The serious folks know how to protect their anonymity well, and it's unlikely that any significant portion of them will be caught and tried. The script kiddies are pretty vulnerable though, and are going to get picked off by prosecution.

Thing is, there's an evolution, from LOIC downloader, to someone who understands the security concepts better, to those who are able to plan and mount real attacks. If you cut the script kiddie population down drastically, and make it hard to recruit people into Anonymous, then it's going to diminish the population of higher-up members.

The strategy ends up being just like a real war: attack and pick off off the soldiers, until the generals are exposed, then go after the generals.

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